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Cyberspace Law Seminar, Spring
2004
Writing Timeline Mileposts
NOTE: What
you need to have prepared by each of these mileposts is laid out more fully
in the "Writing Assignments" Web page. This
page merely refers to the mileposts (deadlines) by which they need to be
submitted. (The reason for the 11:30 a.m. deadlines is that my assistant
only works half time, 8:00 a.m. until noon, each day.)
-
The first two weeks -- from the time you first see
this Web page until January 28, are the most important period for your
seminar paper. This is the time during which you should be doing a substantial
amount of "pre-research" each day, exploring on the Internet and elsewhere
the range of possible topics, discussing your options with me (in
person or by e-mail), perhaps changing or refining your choice, and ultimately
settling on your actual topic.
-
Wednesday, January 28, at 11:30 a.m.
is the final deadline to conclude the topic selection process, settle
on a sufficiently narrowed topic, and turn it in to my assistant before
she leaves that day. Hopefully, this is a topic that you and I have already
tentatively agreed upon. Once I have formally approved and signed off on
your topic . . .
-
The next two weeks – January 29-Febrary 11 – is a
period during which you should do enough research that you are able to
hold a conference with me during the week of February 11th to discuss how
your topic is holding up and your research is coming along. See "Conferences"
for more insight as to what they involve.
-
The outline. (See "Outlines.")
This will then give you three weeks to put together either
(1) a detailed (at least three-level) outline of how you propose to organize
your paper, or (if your hatred of outlines is so severe that it
interferes with your doing your best work), (2) with my prior permission,
a rough draft of your paper [with the possibility of a – very limited
– option of indicating, within brackets, what will be inserted where there
are brief omissions]. The outlining option is very highly recommended.
Outlines are due March 3th by 11:30 a.m. This will give us some
additional time for our . . .
-
Conferences March 4-5 and 8
are
designed to enable you to get me committed to the approach you are taking,
as represented in your detailed outline.
-
Spring break is March 13-21.
-
First final draft preparation, additional research.
You will then have from March 22nd (or from March 9th if you choose to
use spring break week that way) until March 31st to do the additional
research and writing necessary to prepare your formal "first final draft."
Recall that a "first final draft" is a final, not a "rough," draft.
It should be the best work of which you are capable. This draft
is solely your work product, and it is, therefore, the major part of the
research paper process for purposes of assigning a grade. (Subsequent drafts
may include such direct input from me as you may find useful, and are,
therefore, less representative of work uniquely yours.) If you've done
your research early, and have a sufficiently detailed outline, writing
your first final draft should be the fun part: putting into prose what
you've already thought through and organized, revising and rewriting, tweaking
here and there with your words the way a potter does with her clay. First
final drafts are due March 31st by 11:30 a.m.
-
Final final draft preparation, additional research and
writing. On the assumption I can get the editing done April 1-4, we
can hold one-on-one conferences the week of April 5th to discuss
the necessary additional research, writing, organization, proof reading,
and rewriting on your papers. This will leave you a little over a week
to do that work. (It will also leave you the final week of the semester,
beginning April 19th, free of obligations for this seminar.) The deadline
for the “final final draft” will be April 16th at 11:30 a.m.
[20031221]